Just
20 minutes of contact with nature will lower stress hormone levels, reveals new
study
Frontiers
Taking at least twenty
minutes out of your day to stroll or sit in a place that makes you feel in
contact with nature will significantly lower your stress hormone levels.
That's the finding of a study that has established for the first time the most effective dose of an urban nature experience.
Healthcare practitioners can use this discovery, published in Frontiers in Psychology, to prescribe 'nature-pills' in the knowledge that they have a real measurable effect.
That's the finding of a study that has established for the first time the most effective dose of an urban nature experience.
Healthcare practitioners can use this discovery, published in Frontiers in Psychology, to prescribe 'nature-pills' in the knowledge that they have a real measurable effect.
"We know that spending time in nature reduces stress, but until now it was unclear how much is enough, how often to do it, or even what kind of nature experience will benefit us," says Dr. MaryCarol Hunter, an Associate Professor at the University of Michigan and lead author of this research.
"Our study shows that for the greatest payoff, in terms of efficiently lowering levels of the stress hormone cortisol, you should spend 20 to 30 minutes sitting or walking in a place that provides you with a sense of nature."
A free and natural
stress-relieving remedy
Nature pills could be
a low-cost solution to reduce the negative health impacts stemming from growing
urbanization and indoor lifestyles dominated by screen viewing. To assist
healthcare practitioners looking for evidence-based guidelines on what exactly
to dispense, Hunter and her colleagues designed an experiment that would give a
realistic estimate of an effective dose.
Over an 8-week period,
participants were asked to take a nature pill with a duration of 10 minutes or
more, at least 3 times a week. Levels of cortisol, a stress hormone, were
measured from saliva samples taken before and after a nature pill, once every
two weeks.
"Participants
were free to choose the time of day, duration, and the place of their nature
experience, which was defined as anywhere outside that in the opinion of the
participant, made them feel like they've interacted with nature. There were a
few constraints to minimize factors known to influence stress: take the nature
pill in daylight, no aerobic exercise, and avoid the use of social media, internet,
phone calls, conversations and reading," Hunter explains.
She continues,
"Building personal flexibility into the experiment, allowed us to identify
the optimal duration of a nature pill, no matter when or where it is taken, and
under the normal circumstances of modern life, with its unpredictability and
hectic scheduling."
To make allowances for
busy lifestyles, while also providing meaningful results, the experimental
design was novel in other aspects too.
"We accommodated
day to day differences in a participant's stress status by collecting four
snapshots of cortisol change due to a nature pill," says Hunter. "It
also allowed us to identify and account for the impact of the ongoing, natural
drop in cortisol level as the day goes on, making the estimate of effective
duration more reliable."
Nature will nurture
The data revealed that
just a twenty-minute nature experience was enough to significantly reduce
cortisol levels. But if you spent a little more time immersed in a nature
experience, 20 to 30 minutes sitting or walking, cortisol levels dropped at
their greatest rate. After that, additional de-stressing benefits continue to
add up but at a slower rate.
"Healthcare
practitioners can use our results as an evidence-based rule of thumb on what to
put in a nature-pill prescription," says Hunter. "It provides the
first estimates of how nature experiences impact stress levels in the context
of normal daily life. It breaks new ground by addressing some of the
complexities of measuring an effective nature dose."
Hunter hopes this
study will form the basis of further research in this area.
"Our experimental
approach can be used as a tool to assess how age, gender, seasonality, physical
ability and culture influences the effectiveness of nature experiences on
well-being. This will allow customized nature pill prescriptions, as well as a
deeper insight on how to design cities and wellbeing programs for the
public."